Coucou les French learners,
This season of the year can be very hectic, and I myself do feel depleted.
The hustle and bustle of daily life, combined with the added pressures of the holiday season, leaves me feeling drained and overwhelmed. If you’re experiencing these feelings, you’re not alone.
As someone who is constantly juggling multiple responsibilities, including running this wonderful French program, I understand the struggle.
However, I want to assure you that there are ways to find joy and delight in your French journey, even when you’re feeling low on energy.
Here is one thing you can do to stay motivated and engaged with your French acquisition.
But first, let’s start with my personal experience with Touch football!
Mon expérience personnelle avec le Touch Football
Il y a deux ans, j’ai commencé à jouer au Touch Football, un sport très populaire en Australie. C’est une version du rugby sans plaquages, où les joueurs “touchent” leurs adversaires pour les arrêter.
Au début, je n’avais aucune idée de comment jouer. Je n’avais aucune notion de rugby et je ne pouvais même pas attraper le ballon ovale.
Malgré cela, j’ai persévéré et je me suis entraînée trois fois par semaine. Je n’ai manqué aucun entraînement et, malgré les nombreux ballons que j’ai laissé tomber, j’ai commencé à m’améliorer.
Aujourd’hui, je peux attraper le ballon et même marquer des essais, youpi !
Cependant, en ce moment, je me sens complètement démotivée. Je n’arrive toujours pas à bien passer la balle. J’ai l’impression d’être encore une débutante et j’envisage même d’arrêter.
Vous sentez-vous pareil avec le Français ?
Peut-être que cela fait deux ans que vous êtes en train d’acquérir le Français et que vous n’arrivez toujours pas à maintenir une conversation ?
Ne vous découragez pas !
How to Keep Going
Even when you feel like you’re failing, it’s important to keep at it and find joy in the journey.
Keep it as a habit.
A habit is not just a repetitive action. It is an intentional practice.
When French becomes a habit, it no longer feels like a chore or a conscious effort; instead, it becomes a natural part of your daily rhythm.
Habits create physical pathways in the brain that eventually allow actions to occur automatically.
This process frees mental energy for other pursuits and ensures steady progress. If you make reading French a daily habit, you won’t need to deliberate over whether or not to do it, it will simply become part of your routine.
In my case, I am training to pass the ball with my son in the evening when he comes back from school. This habit is not burdensome but rather a delight.
The joy comes from seeing the fruits of steady effort. Whether it’s starting to pass the ball better, understanding a new phrase, holding a short narraton in French, or appreciating French culture through its literature and art.
By keeping it as a habit, you set yourself on an effortless track toward mastery while finding satisfaction in the journey itself.
By the way, there are still 3 spots left to join the French Book Club starting in January. It’s perfect for intermediate to advanced learners. We’ll be reading “La Venus d’Ille” by Mérimée. This club promises rich discussions and profound language immersion.
Click here to join the French Book Club!
CLARITY: progress step by step through stages and make French become clear to you. Understand French with ease.
COMMUNITY: meet weekly and keep yourself accountable through the most caring and invested community. Think French naturally.
TRANSFORMATION: feel empowered. Be fluent in French. Transform yourself and get a new soul. Speak French freely.